0 results for 'Ford Harrison'
Miami Labor Lawyer Robin Symons, 4 Others Join Gordon & Rees
While the rest of her partners went to Duane Morris to shut down the Miami office of Epstein Becker & Green, Robin Symons and four associates joined Gordon & Rees. Symons considered other firms, but ultimately settled on Gordon & Rees after they began a "viral" campaign" to lure her.For Lawyers, Pearls of Wisdom From the Silver Screen
Bailout triggers exec pay worries
Attorneys specializing in executive compensation are hearing from banking and finance executives forced to sign waivers of any right to challenge reductions in pay or benefits required when banks accept federal bailout money."People affected by the new rules are very skittish,'' said Stephen Zweig, a New York partner who is the head of the employee benefits group at Ford Harrison.The Lawyering Behind Atlantic Station
Meredith [email protected] Station officially opens to the public today after years of development, construction and, of course, lawyering. The innovative mixed-used project, which is the size of a small city, was the brainchild of local developer James F. Jacoby. In the mid 1990s, he grew interested in the abandoned Atlantic Steel site and partnered with AIG Global Real Estate Investment Corp.Dallas Firm Cuts Billables for First-Years
Strasburger & Price is cutting billable requirements for first-year lawyers. At the same time, the 183-attorney firm will require incoming associates to shadow senior attorney mentors, participate in training sessions and work on pro bono projects. The adjustment is designed to enhance on-the-job training while relieving clients from some of the burden of paying for it. The law firm decided to make the change based on "ongoing dialogue" its leaders have with associates, says managing partner Dan Butcher.An Executive's Business Savvy Provides an Edge in Mediation
Sooner or later, a C-level executive will sit through the mediation of a suit � often entering hopeful but leaving disillusioned. That shouldn't be.Court renamed to remember Judge Jackson
THE MUNICIPAL COURT OF ATLANTA at 150 Garnett St. was rechristened the Lenwood A. Jackson Sr. Justice Center on Friday before a crowd of about 200 lawyers, judges and court personnel in honor of Jackson's persistence and leadership in getting the facility built. Jackson served as a judge on the City Court of Atlanta from 1992 until his death in 2005 at age 61 from lung cancer.Trending Stories
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